Founded in August 2013 by
Valentin Stalf and Maximilian Tayenthal as a
fintech startup under the name Papayer GmbH, N26 initially offered a prepaid
Mastercard financial management solution aimed at teenagers, which was launched in February 2014. During an interview with
Business Insider later that year, the founders said that their service represented a niche market after receiving many inquiries regarding the availability of a similar service for adults. Subsequently, after securing €2 million in seed funding during June 2014, they changed their name to Number26 and discontinued the teenage finance service to work on a broader
transaction account service for general use. N26 launched their banking product on October 20, 2014, in a private beta. Shortly after launch, they received €10 million in a
Series A round, at which point the service has been available in Germany and Austria. During their initial operations, N26 did not hold a banking license; instead, it provided an interface to a
backend provided by
Wirecard. In July 2016, it re-branded as N26 Bank, after receiving a
banking license they applied for 9 months prior by the German regulator
BaFin. The company stated that they will start operating on their own infrastructure in autumn that year. At this point, they had over 200,000 customers. In June 2016, N26 terminated a number of customer accounts. The company said that reasons for these closures included suspected
money laundering and excessive ATM withdrawals, with some customers making 15 to 30 withdrawals per month. N26 explained that while it offered free withdrawals, it incurred a cost of up to €2 per withdrawal in Germany, and that the volume of withdrawals by some users created a financial burden that could not be sustained across its customer base. The same month, N26 raised $40 million in a
Series B round. When N26 started asking customers to transfer their accounts to the bank's own infrastructure in November 2016, customers had to get a new account
IBAN. Accounts previously held by Wirecard would be terminated. However, many customers reported issues during account migration, with many issues to get in touch with their customer support. N26 apologized and was transparent about what happened, saying they were overwhelmed by a large amount of customer support queries, even after initial preparation. However, they did not comment on other reported issues such as funds going missing and other software bugs. N26 made
transaction accounts available across 17
Eurozone countries in December 2016. Shortly after, N26 reached more than 300,000 users in March 2017, at which point they were processing over 10 million credit card transactions per year, with a transaction volume of over €3 billion. Following this, N26 raised $160 million during a
Series C round led by Chinese internet giant
Tencent Holdings and Allianz X (
Allianz) in March 2018. During this time, N26 claimed to have a customer base of 850,000, aiming to have 5,000,000 customers by 2020. This was followed by an additional $300 million in funding in January 2019 as part of a
Series D round led by
Insight Partners with Singapore's sovereign wealth fund
GIC and a few existing investors also participating, putting N26 at a valuation of $2.7 billion. With its new valuation, N26 overtook
Revolut as the most valuable mobile bank in Europe. N26 started letting customers from the United States sign up for a waiting list on July 11, 2019. Due to the differences between EU and the US market, particularly in regards to regulatory schemes for financial providers, N26 partnered with
Axos Financial to serve as the provider of its services, insured by the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. Unlike in Europe, where they are provided by
MasterCard, N26 used
Visa cards for
U.S. customers. The following week, the company extended its series D round with an additional $170 million investment, valuing the company at $3.5 billion. In May 2020, the company announced the extension of its recent Series D round with an additional $100M raised at the same valuation. On 11 February 2020, N26 announced that it would cease doing business in the United Kingdom and close all accounts effective 15 April, due to the
UK withdrawal from the European Union. The company cited the fact that European financial institutions can no longer operate in the region without applying for a banking license in the
UK (rather than being allowed to operate under its EU license), as well as "the timings and framework outlined in the
EU Withdrawal Agreement". Following internal conflicts between employees and the N26 management, the workers of N26's Berlin subsidiaries, N26 GmbH and N26 Operations GmbH, elected
works councils to represent the employees of the Berlin offices in November and December 2020. The elections saw approximately 30% voter turnout, resulting in eleven elected works council members. These elections followed attempts to establish a works council in summer 2020, which were reportedly met with resistance from N26 management, including legal actions such as interim injunctions attempting to prevent employee meetings and the establishment of the electoral committee ("Wahlvorstand"). In January 2021 N26 announced the upcoming appointment of former
ProSiebenSat.1 Media and
Zalando executive
Jan Kemper as the company's Chief Financial Officer. In January 2022, the bank announced that Kemper will also be taking over the role of Chief Operating Officer in addition to his role as CFO. In October 2021 N26 raised $900 million in a
Series E round led by Third Point Ventures and Coatue Management, and joined by Dragoneer Investment Group as well as existing N26 investors. The funding round valued the digital bank at $9 billion. In November 2021 N26 announced that it would be pulling out of the United States in January 2022, leading to the closure of approximately 500,000 accounts. American customers were no longer be able to use its app after January 11, 2022. The withdrawal was to focus on N26's core European business. The company confirmed this in an official press release and N26's official corporate blog. In November 2022 N26 changed its legal form from a German
Limited Liability Company (Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung – GmbH) to a German
Stock Corporation (Aktiengesellschaft – AG). At the same time, a five-member board of directors was appointed, chaired by Marcus W. Mosen. Other members are Jörg Gerbig, Dr. Barbara Roth, Dr. Julian Deutz and Dr. Robert Killian. In the first half of 2024, N26 partners with Upvest, an investment API provider, to launch a stock and
ETF trading product. This product will initially debut in Austria before expanding to the German market. In April 2025, N26 got featured in the Forbes World's Best Bank list in Germany. Later in August 2025, co-founder and co-chief executive officer Valentin Stalf stepped down from his role as co-CEO due to conflicts with investors concerned with further sanctions from BaFin. Following a 2024 audit, the
Federal Financial Supervisory Authority assigned a supervisor for N26 on 15 December 2025 and imposed several business restrictions, including a ban on new mortgage loans in the Netherlands and a requirement to increase financial reserves. This regulatory pressure coincided with a major leadership restructuring: Maximilian Tayenthal stepped down from his operational duties as co-CEO on 31 December 2025. In April 2026, Mike Dargan took over as the new CEO, replacing the previous leadership duo of Marcus Mosen and Tayenthal to lead the bank's strategic "cleanup". ==Company==